Photo de l'auteur

Cornelia H. Butler

Auteur de WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution

24+ oeuvres 465 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Cornelia H. Butler

Mark Bradford: Scorched Earth (2015) 21 exemplaires
Joan Didion: What She Means (2022) — Directeur de publication — 19 exemplaires
Made in L.A. 2014 (2014) 16 exemplaires
Mark Bradford (2018) 15 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Andrea Zittel: Critical Space (2005)quelques éditions52 exemplaires
Painting (1998) — Curator — 40 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1963-02-01
Sexe
female

Membres

Critiques

Catching up with the foremothers with this collection of essays and images. Especially helpful/interesting to me as I consider and develop my grad ideas—The Woman Who Never Was: Self-Representation, Photography, and First-Wave Feminist Art by Abigail Solomon-Godeau.
 
Signalé
rebwaring | 3 autres critiques | Aug 14, 2023 |
"WACK!" offers the first international survey of a remarkable body of work that emerged from the dynamic relationships between art and feminism in and around the 1970's and includes 119 artists representing twenty-one defferent countries.'

(Abstract from Foreword by Jeremy Strick)
 
Signalé
Centre_A | 3 autres critiques | Nov 27, 2020 |
In her expressionistic drawings and paintings of the last three decades, acclaimed South African artist Marlene Dumas has focused on the human figure, probing themes of love, desire, despair and confusion in order to slyly critique social and political attitudes toward women, children, people of color and others who have historically been victimized. From her evocative portraits, based on photographs of friends and family as well as figures culled from printed pornography, to her large-scale images highlighting charged relationships within groups, Dumas' work explores the contradictions behind the physical reality of the body, merging acute social commentary with personal experience and art-historical antecedent to create unsettling and ambiguous psychological statements.
Accompanying Dumas' first major mid-career survey in the U.S., with stops in three major American cities, (one yet to be announced) this substantial, fully-illustrated publication features a newly commissioned essay by renowned scholar Richard Shiff, placing the artist's work in relation to both American figurative painting since the 1980s and Abstract Expressionism. The book also includes curator Cornelia H. Butler's examination of Dumas' photographic sources and shorter texts by Lisa Gabrielle Mark and Matthew Monahan. Writings by the artist, as well as an extensive illustrated exhibition history and bibliography, complete this comprehensive examination of the work of one of the most thought-provoking artists working today.
Born in Capetown, South Africa, in 1953, Marlene Dumas has lived in Amsterdam since 1976. Over the last three decades she has had numerous solo exhibitions throughout Europe and the U.S., including the Tate Gallery, London; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; and the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris. In 1995 she represented The Netherlands at the 46th Venice Biennale
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
petervanbeveren | Jan 21, 2019 |
This is an amazing exhibition catalog because it's not just images of what was in the show. It contains some really interesting information and it is an incredible resource of info on the subject of feminist art.
 
Signalé
kjflaherty | 3 autres critiques | Jul 31, 2011 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
24
Aussi par
2
Membres
465
Popularité
#52,883
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
5
ISBN
26
Langues
1

Tableaux et graphiques